The New Zealand SailGP Team has been crowned inaugural Impact League champions at the SailGP Season 2 Grand Final in San Francisco today, winning USD $100,000 prize money for its Race for the Future partner, Live Ocean Foundation.
A second leaderboard which runs alongside the Season Championship, the Impact League tracks the positive actions teams take to reduce their overall footprint and help accelerate inclusivity in sailing.
The Impact League is sport’s first podium for the planet and an historic moment for everyone involved. The trophy was presented to the New Zealand team by Oceanographer and legend Dr Sylvia Earle.
The New Zealand SailGP Team has led the Impact League since its inception this season and has committed to continually finding ways to operate more sustainably and innovate.
New Zealand SailGP Team co-CEO Peter Burling said: “We’re stoked to win the first Impact League. It’s been a massive team effort from everyone involved, from the shore team, the sailing team, management and our partners.
“We’ve taken a close look at every area of our operations throughout the season to find ways to improve, develop innovative solutions, introduce new technologies, connect with sustainable partners and use our voice to champion action for a healthy ocean with our Race for the Future partner Live Ocean Foundation.”
The prize money will be used to support Live Ocean Foundation partner research into the significance of kelp forests and their regeneration. This work is being led by Dr Nick Shears and Dr Caitlin Blain from the University of Auckland.
Kelp is vital for ocean ecosystems to flourish, creating habitats for marine life and is hugely efficient at fixing carbon. However, many coastlines which were once home to vast forests of kelp, now lie bare, thriving reef ecosystems replaced by sea urchin barrens.
The research project is also investigating how kelp forests contribute to coastal carbon cycles. The work will help researchers understand the role of kelp forests in climate change mitigation and provides an exciting potential opportunity for quantifying and valuing blue carbon.
New Zealand SailGP Team co-CEO Blair Tuke said “Increasing awareness of the vital role a healthy ocean plays in a healthy future has been a massive focus for us this season so it’s awesome that the Impact League victory will enable us to support this important work by the University of Auckland through our partnership with Live Ocean Foundation.”
Tuke said while it was a great result for the team and Live Ocean Foundation, it has also been incredibly positive to see all SailGP teams stepping up their game and pushing each other throughout the season to improve.
“Through sport we have an opportunity to connect people to the issues our planet faces and it’s great to see all the teams with their Race For The Future partners pushing hard for their respective purposes. By embedding this into the League and turning it into a competition, it’s become a real priority for every team.”
A major contributing factor to the New Zealand SailGP Team’s Impact League success has been the way it has used its platform to raise awareness of the critical role a healthy ocean plays in a healthy future.
From shining a spotlight on the plight of the Antipodean Albatross through an emotive global broadcast video shown during the Spain Grand Prix, to displaying SDG14 – ‘Life Below Water’ on its wing at the Mubadala United States Grand Prix, and partnering with Yachting New Zealand on a Clean Club programme, the team has committed to championing action for a healthy ocean.
However, while the team has engaged in numerous large scale campaigns, it has been the many small improvements over the season that have seen the largest collective impact.
The New Zealand SailGP Team consistently scored in the top three teams for the lowest chase boat fuel usage, reduced its water consumption by 36 per cent and increased its percentage of vegetarian meals at events from 18 to 66 per cent among many other refinements.
Live Ocean chief executive Sally Paterson said: “Sport and sportspeople play a vital role in bringing people around the big issues of our time. Seeing the SailGP league and New Zealand SailGP Team step up to this and work hard on their own actions has been a real thrill. We’re incredibly proud of their win.
“The prize money will fund much needed research into the importance of kelp forests and their regeneration. We know kelp grows and absorbs carbon at astounding rates, this research aims to quantify how much carbon is sequestered by kelp and how we can protect areas to allow it to flourish. This will be a vital piece in informing good policy and decisions around the potential for blue carbon.”
SailGP Director of Purpose & Impact Fiona Morgan said: “Sport has the opportunity to play a critical role in educating people around the climate crisis. Awarding the first winners of the Impact League is a very proud moment for SailGP, and proof that sustainability can be embedded in the fabric of sport.
“In just one season we have changed mindsets and driven further sustainability and cutting innovation into our operations. The New Zealand team is a shining example of a team doing things differently for a better planet. I can’t wait to see what we achieve in Season 3.
Initiatives the New Zealand SailGP Team has undertaken as part of the Impact League:
- At the Spain Sail Grand Prix, the team shined a spotlight on the plight of the Antipodean albatross and the dangers they face at sea. Burling and Tuke spoke at the SailGP Champions for Change forum alongside New Zealand ambassador to Spain, Nigel Fyfe and met with Spanish Secretary of State for Sport José Manuel Franco. Subsequently an agreement was signed between Spain and New Zealand in December last year, collaborating to boost protections for threatened seabirds.
- At the Mubadala United States Sail Grand Prix this week, the New Zealand SailGP Team displayed Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 14 – Life Below Water on its wing. This symbolises the team’s commitment to the ocean and the life in it. The New Zealand SailGP Team also partnered with Yachting New Zealand on their Clean Club programme to help protect and enhance New Zealand’s oceans for future generations.
- The New Zealand SailGP Team consistently scored in the top three teams for the lowest chase boat fuel usage. Women’s Pathway Program athletes Liv Mackay and Erica Dawson have been fully integrated into the team this season. In addition to racing with the team since the Spain Sail Grand Prix in October, they have also been actively involved off the F50 as well, across race management briefings, daily debriefs, post event debriefs, on-water comms, on-water data analysis and shore crew support.
- The team replaced single-use cable ties with self-adhesive velcro ties for attaching the righting lines to the tramp, saving more than 250 cable ties over the season and ensuring no plastic cable ties would end up in the ocean in the event of a capsize.
- At the Australia Sail Grand Prix in Sydney, the team reduced its hose water consumption by 36 per cent by using vinegar and water to wash down the majority of the F50, meaning less soap suds to rinse off.
- The team also increased its percentage of vegetarian meals from 18 per cent at the Bermuda Sail Grand Prix to 66 per cent at the Spain Sail Grand Prix.
Impact League Season 2 Results:
Pos | Team | Pts |
---|---|---|
1 | New Zealand | 1246 |
2 | Great Britain | 1192 |
3 | Australia | 1161 |
3 | Spain | 1094 |
5 | France | 1081 |
6 | Japan | 1048 |
7 | United States | 1024 |
8 | Denmark | 967 |